package com.xxniu.test;

//
//========================================================================
//Copyright (c) 1995-2016 Mort Bay Consulting Pty. Ltd.
//------------------------------------------------------------------------
//All rights reserved. This program and the accompanying materials
//are made available under the terms of the Eclipse Public License v1.0
//and Apache License v2.0 which accompanies this distribution.
//
//  The Eclipse Public License is available at
//  http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html
//
//  The Apache License v2.0 is available at
//  http://www.opensource.org/licenses/apache2.0.php
//
//You may elect to redistribute this code under either of these licenses.
//========================================================================
//

import java.io.File;
import java.lang.management.ManagementFactory;

import org.eclipse.jetty.jmx.MBeanContainer;
import org.eclipse.jetty.security.HashLoginService;
import org.eclipse.jetty.server.Server;
import org.eclipse.jetty.webapp.Configuration;
import org.eclipse.jetty.webapp.WebAppContext;

public class OneWebAppWithJsp
{
public static void main( String[] args ) throws Exception
{
    // Create a basic jetty server object that will listen on port 8080.
    // Note that if you set this to port 0 then
    // a randomly available port will be assigned that you can either look
    // in the logs for the port,
    // or programmatically obtain it for use in test cases.
    Server server = new Server( 8080 );

    // Setup JMX
    MBeanContainer mbContainer = new MBeanContainer(
            ManagementFactory.getPlatformMBeanServer() );
    server.addBean( mbContainer );

    // The WebAppContext is the entity that controls the environment in
    // which a web application lives and
    // breathes. In this example the context path is being set to "/" so it
    // is suitable for serving root context
    // requests and then we see it setting the location of the war. A whole
    // host of other configurations are
    // available, ranging from configuring to support annotation scanning in
    // the webapp (through
    // PlusConfiguration) to choosing where the webapp will unpack itself.
    WebAppContext webapp = new WebAppContext();
    webapp.setContextPath( "/" );
    File warFile = new File(
            "E:/jetty/my-base/webapps/Test.war" );
    if (!warFile.exists())
    {
        throw new RuntimeException( "Unable to find WAR File: "
                + warFile.getAbsolutePath() );
    }
    webapp.setWar( warFile.getAbsolutePath() );

    // This webapp will use jsps and jstl. We need to enable the
    // AnnotationConfiguration in order to correctly
    // set up the jsp container
    Configuration.ClassList classlist = Configuration.ClassList
            .setServerDefault( server );
    classlist.addBefore(
            "org.eclipse.jetty.webapp.JettyWebXmlConfiguration",
            "org.eclipse.jetty.annotations.AnnotationConfiguration" );

    // Set the ContainerIncludeJarPattern so that jetty examines these
    // container-path jars for tlds, web-fragments etc.
    // If you omit the jar that contains the jstl .tlds, the jsp engine will
    // scan for them instead.
    webapp.setAttribute(
            "org.eclipse.jetty.server.webapp.ContainerIncludeJarPattern",
            ".*/[^/]*servlet-api-[^/]*\\.jar$|.*/javax.servlet.jsp.jstl-.*\\.jar$|.*/[^/]*taglibs.*\\.jar$" );

    // A WebAppContext is a ContextHandler as well so it needs to be set to
    // the server so it is aware of where to
    // send the appropriate requests.
    server.setHandler( webapp );

    // Configure a LoginService.
    // Since this example is for our test webapp, we need to setup a
    // LoginService so this shows how to create a very simple hashmap based
    // one. The name of the LoginService needs to correspond to what is
    // configured in the webapp's web.xml and since it has a lifecycle of
    // its own we register it as a bean with the Jetty server object so it
    // can be started and stopped according to the lifecycle of the server
    // itself.
    HashLoginService loginService = new HashLoginService();
    loginService.setName( "Test Realm" );
    loginService.setConfig( "etc/realm.properties" );
    server.addBean( loginService );

    // Start things up!
    server.start();

    // The use of server.join() the will make the current thread join and
    // wait until the server is done executing.
    // See http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/lang/Thread.html#join()
    server.join();
}
}